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Pull it out as best you can and then search R2R for others' experiences. Have you tested water parameters? Have a clean-up crew?
Hey thanks for responding, I have been cleaning up with hand for a while now. I know my phosphates are a bit too high and nitrates a bit too low, when I really need it to be the opposite. My clean up crew barely cleans up, they like fighting each other. Tank is kind of old, over a year old, I never had this problem until it popped up out of nowherePull it out as best you can and then search R2R for others' experiences. Have you tested water parameters? Have a clean-up crew?
I was thinking the same thing.kind of looks like bryopsis which can grow in almost any setting. clean up crew wont really touch it. if you are manually removing have to make sure you get the roots or it comes back. peroxide dip if you can remove the rocks might help or look to possibly reef flux or flux rx for chemical treatment
clean up crew started a fight club it sound like
yes I am a little bit of a different story , sorry Brandon , I am leading this fellow astray. I had a 125 with about 150 pound of rock , manual removal was not really an option@roferro
if you're serious about fixing that tank after the read study, we can make a custom run for you here and answer any questions. 99.9% of any question is already handled in that thread above though, important to study it since it's so recent. he closed out his fix about a week ago, it's recent.
the #1 reason you need a rip clean is because killing that much algae within the tank and letting it rot is opposite of a rip clean, and will ruin your tank. you have to get the mass out not just convert it into a million snail waste pellets that fill up the already filled up sandbed. if you add chemicals to the tank, you get the results opposite to what we show.